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Nonlinear model of descending thoracic aorta

FROM:

Ivan Breslavsky and Marco Amabili (Department of Mechanical Engineering, McGill University, Montreal),

“Nonlinear model of human descending thoracic aortic segments with residual stresses”, Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology, August 2018, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10237-018-1060-5

ABSTRACT: The nonlinear static deformation of human descending thoracic aortic segments is investigated. The aorta segments are modeled as straight axisymmetric circular cylindrical shells with three hyperelastic anisotropic layers and residual stresses by using an advanced nonlinear shell theory with higher-order thickness deformation not available in commercial finite element codes. The residual stresses are evaluated in the closed configuration in an original way making use of the multiplicative decomposition. The model was initially validated through comparison with published numerical and experimental data for artery and aorta segments. Then, two different cases of healthy thoracic descending aorta segments were numerically simulated. Material data and residual stresses used in the models came from published layer-specific experiments for human aortas. The material model adopted in the study is the mechanically based Gasser–Ogden–Holzapfel, which takes into account collagen fiber dispersion. Numerical results present a difference between systolic and diastolic inner radii close to the data available in literature from in vivo measurements for the corresponding age groups. Constant length of the aortic segment between systolic and diastolic pressures was obtained for the material model that takes the dispersion of the fiber orientations into account.

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